Soldiers and Old Pros
Florida’s Soccer Soldiers helped us dream in 2019. A team of Sunday-leaguers, amateurs all, they humbled pros Miami FC and Charlotte Independence. They did it with style too. But they met the wrong foe in the Third Round. North Carolina FC boss Dave Sarachan has won Open Cups and seen it all. His team did what pros do to beat amateurs. They sat back as the Soldiers charged hard. They let Valentin Sabella, hero of the previous rounds, punch himself out. The best Soldiers were sucking wind inside 30 minutes. Sarachan and his NCFC happily played the role of the bigger boy on the schoolyard, not ruled by emotion or lured by quick glories. They held the Soldiers by the forehead and waited while they swung. Predictably, the young bulls faded. NCFC took their chance, won 1-0 and moved on. By the end, the Soccer Soldiers – wearing the neon green of a construction crew – were out of gas and out of ideas. A late red card for the outstanding Daniel Meneses signaled the end of the their charge. Romance be damned.
The Cupset – It is Written
But there is romance. There are dreams worth dreaming. Little David can win. He’s got a rock and an arm and there are soft spots in the giant’s armor. There’s one every year. An amateur team that finds something they didn’t know was there. They scale walls. Their goalkeepers grow to fill the whole of the goal. Their strikers find holes where they aren’t. Last year it was NTX Rayados, before that Christos FC of Baltimore in 2017. Before that someone else and all the way back as far as you want to look at the 106-year-old Open Cup. This year, we have Orange County FC. Their smiles are ancient. Their heroics, biblical. Their run to the Fourth Round, and a date with LA Galaxy, is as thrilling and joyful as it is pre-ordained.
What Happens in Vegas
There was something in the air in North Vegas. In that old ballpark near the Strip. Eric Wynalda, coach of the all-pro Las Vegas Lights, on one side. Paul Caligiuri, his old roommate with the U.S. National Team, was on the other, in charge of the amateur Orange County FC. The first goal, from Cody Shelton, started the whispers. Upset. Cupset. Whatever you’ll call the miracle. Then another fell. It was a tragi-comic own-goal that went cruelly past Angel Alvarez, the 21-year-old Lights goalkeeper who attended high school a few blocks from Cashman Field where OCFC were holding our dreams in their hands. If they were nervous about tripping up, it didn’t show. If they worried about crushing them, they didn’t let on. The Lights, a man down, clawed back. They tied it near the end. But it was already over and they didn’t know it. The sling was spinning, making a whistle in the air, and the stone had been flung. Blake Frischknecht looks awkward, but he’s a killer. He’s a King, like old David was. He turned up at the back post unnoticed – no small feat for a young man well over six feet and built like an ox. He volleyed home. 3-2 with only moments remaining! And cue the celebrations, the thick romantic scribbles. And another! This one from Oscar Flores who tiptoed with the ball into the Lights goal, and the giant was down. Goliath wasn’t getting up. The OCFC players hardly knew where to turn in celebration. Their fists in the air and their wide smiles seemed to ask a question in a long-gone language. Goliath who?